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Latin America in the Modern Era

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Title: Latin America in the Modern Era


1
Latin America in the Modern Era
2
This painting called Liberators by Alfredo
Zalce shows four important leaders of Latin
American independence. The two priests of the
left are Father Miguel Hidalgo and Jose de
Morelos, two leaders of Mexican independence who
were killed in the war against Spain. On their
right South American "Liberator" Simon Bolivar
shakes hands with Argentinean general Jose de San
Martin. The two were responsible for leading
South Americans in Spanish colonies to
independence.
3
Part I On the Eve of Independence
4
On the eve of independence . . .
Demographically, Latin America was a multiracial
society (much different from Europe). Spain and
Portugal controlled ¾s of the Western
Hemisphere, but only a small number of Iberians
settled there the Peninsulares. Together,
Peninsulares and Creoles compromised only 2 of
the population and owned nearly all the mines,
ranches, plantations, and (the very few)
manufacturing establishments.
5
Demographics, contd
  • Greatly outnumbering the Peninsulares and Creole
    elites, the rest of the peoples in the region
    supplied the forced labor, which was the
    foundation of the economy Amerindian peons
    (peasants in semi-slave status on a hacienda
    similar to serfs), mestizos, mulattoes, and black
    slaves.
  • Only in Brazil did black slaves form the majority
    of the population, but elsewhere in Latin America
    indigenous peoples and people of mixed ancestry
    (mulattoes and mestizos) were the most numerous.
  • This multiracial atmosphere brought a somewhat
    more relaxed attitude about race in Latin America
    than in Europe or in British North America.

6
An example of sociedad de las castas, that
classified people by their ancestry.
7
A representation of Zambos in "Pintura de Castas"
during the Latin American colonial period. (a
zambo is a person of mixed African Amerindian
ancestry). Note the discarded shackles in the
background near the timbers, it represents the
Zambo's freedom from slavery thanks to his
Amerindian ancestry.
8
On the eve of independence . . .
Economically, Spain followed mercantilist
doctrine and closely regulated its American
colonies until well into the 18th c however,
smuggling was rampant as the demand for lower
cost manufactured goods persisted. Spain rivaled
Great Britain (who had the more powerful navy) as
a major European colonial power. On the other
hand, the Portuguese were not as rigid
mercantilists as the Spanish and allowed foreign
merchant ships to Brazilian ports.
Note that mercantilism does not equal
laissez-faire!
9
On the eve of independence . . .
Religion
The Roman Catholic Church established its most
important responsibility as the conversion of
Amerindians. The church controlled all education
and reserved it for upper and middle classes who
considered it unnecessary and dangerous to
educate the masses. Likewise, 90 of the
population remained illiterate including upper
class women who were taught exclusively domestic
and social skills.
10
On the eve of independence . . .
Intellectually, the scientific revolution and the
Enlightenment reached Latin America by the late
18th c. Colonial newspapers (with its Creole
readership) expressed concern over political
abuses and expressed the Enlightenment idea of
being willing to challenge traditional authority
and belief in reason and social progress.
11
On the eve of independence . . .
  • Viceroys represented the king in New Spain
    (Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America) and
    Peru (all of Spanish South America) and held
    great power over local appointments,
    administration, finance, and the military forces
    present.
  • Most of these important government positions went
    to Peninsulares, which really agitated the
    Creoles.

12
On the eve of independence . . .
  • Like the British North American colonists, the
    Creoles resented the mercantilist regulations
    imposed by the Iberian powers and, drawing from
    Enlightenment political thought, occasionally
    took part in tax revolts and popular uprisings.
  • By the early 18th c, some Creoles began thinking
    of themselves as Spanish-Americans, rather than
    as Spaniards (ahem . . . nationalism) and also
    resented the Peninsulares monopoly of political
    power and aristocratic privilege.
  • The Creoles also held contempt for the mestizo
    middle class (artisans, shopkeepers, merchants,
    etc) and sought to maintain their power and
    position.

13
Part II Latin American Independence . . . a 19th
century affair
14
TRIGGER The aftershocks of the French
Revolution and the era of Napoleon were felt
strongly in Latin America
Influenced by the republican political principles
in the U.S and by the reforms of the French
Revolution and Napoleon, some Creoles hoped to
create comparable liberal institutions in Latin
America at least for the upper classes.
Sketch by Jacques-Louis David of the National
Assembly making the Tennis Court Oath
15
Creoles Revolution
  • The Creoles sought to displace the Peninsulares
    but retain their privileged position in society
    political independence without a real revolution.
  • Some of the more radical leaders of independence
    movements wanted to disestablish the Roman
    Catholic Church and tax or confiscate its
    property.
  • Few Creoles gave much thought to the needs of the
    masses of workers and peasants

16
Saint Dominique (a quick review)aka slaves pwn
  • Ironically, black slaves and mulatto freemen
    launched the revolutionary era, not the Creoles.
  • Saint Dominique revolted against French authority
    and drove out white authority. Toussaint
    LOuverture led a disciplined rebel army and
    fended off attacks by other European nations
    (France, Spain, and Britain) and even revolts by
    mulatto factions.
  • The success of black slaves in Haiti disturbed
    conservative nations in general and slaveholding
    nations in particular.

17
At the end of the bloody uprising of the slaves
of the island of St. Domingue against their
French masters, on January 1, 1804 General
Dessalines, leader of the uprising after the
arrest of Toussaint LOuverture, read the
following Act of Independence on the Place
d'Armes of Gonaïves. The actual author of the
text was Dessalines secretary, Boisrond Tonerre.
Dessalines was soon to have himself crowned
emperor and was assassinated in 1806.
18
LIBERTY OR DEATH
Gonaïves, January 1, 1804 Year I of
Independence Today, January 1, 1804, the General
in Chief of the Indigenous Army, accompanied by
generals and army chiefs convoked in order to
take measures tending to the happiness of the
country After having made known to the assembled
generals his true intention of forever ensuring
to the natives of Haiti a stable government the
object of his greatest solicitude, which he did
in a speech that made known to foreign powers the
resolution to render the country independent, and
to enjoy the liberty consecrated by the blood of
the people of this island and, after having
gathered their opinions, asked each of the
assembled generals to pronounce a vow to forever
renounce France to die rather than to live under
its domination and to fight for independence
with their last breath. The generals, imbued with
these sacred principles, after having with one
voice given their adherence to the well
manifested project of independence, have all
sworn before eternity and before the entire
universe to forever renounce France and to die
rather than live under its domination. Signed Des
salinesGeneral-in-Chief Christophe, Pétion,
Clerveaux, Vernet, GabartMajor
Generals P.Romain, G. Gérin, L. Capois,
Jean-Louis Francois, Férou, Cangé, G. Bazelais,
Magloire Ambroise, J.J. Herne, Toussaint Brave,
YayouBrigadier generals Bonet, F. Paplier,
Morelly, Chevalier, MarionAdjutants-general Magny
, RouxBrigade Chiefs Chaperon, B. Goret,
Macajoux, Dupuy, Carbonne, Diaquoiainé, Raphael,
Malet, DerenoncourtArmy officers Boisrond
TonnerreSecretary  

19
New Spain and Peru Sparked by European war
  • When Napoleon invaded Spain and Portugal in 1807
    and deposed the monarchs, royal authority in the
    Iberian colonies weakened.
  • Argentina removed itself from royal control in
    1810 and proclaimed independence in 1816.
  • Rebels in Venezuela pronounced their independence
    in 1811.
  • Often referred to as the father of South
    America, the Venezuelan Creole Simon Bolivar led
    multiple Latin American independence movements in
    the northern part of South America and in Central
    America.
  • Meanwhile, Jose de San Martin crossed the Andes
    from Argentina into Chile and drove out the
    Spanish in the southern part of the continent.

20
  • While these Creole-led independence movements
    advocated popular sovereignty, they desired
    neither social reform like those promoted by
    Robespierre nor the egalitarian society like in
    Haiti.

21
  • Other European nations considered sending troops
    to stop these movements and supplant their rule
    over the region.
  • However, Great Britain opposed European
    intervention and hoped for new trade and
    investment opportunities, and with the
    possibility of British naval interference, other
    nations werent willing to risk a British naval
    war.

22
After its mild victory in the War of 1812 against
Great Britain, the United States issued the
Monroe Doctrine in 1823 in an attempt to
strengthen its own influence and to voice
opposition to European interference in the
Western Hemisphere, but the U.S.s position was
irrelevant because of its comparatively weak
international status.
23
Mexico Revolutions Origins
  • Whereas the South American independence movements
    were struggles by the upper class, Mexicos
    independence included class revolution and race
    warfare.
  • Creoles and Peninsulares made disorganized
    attempts for independence from 1808 to 1810.
  • But

24
Mexico, Phase 1
  • The rebellion of Amerindian and mestizo peasants
    led by Father Miguel Hidalgo confronted and
    united the upper classes.
  • Father Hidalgo demanded civil rights for
    peasants, a redistribution of wealth, equality
    for peasants, and the return of land to
    indigenous peoples.

25
Mexico, Phase 2
  • Subsequently, both liberal and conservative
    elites joined to crush the rebellion, and the
    revolutionary movement dissolved into guerrilla
    warfare when Father Hidalgo was captured and
    executed in 1811.
  • However, the 1820 liberal revolution in Spain led
    conservative Mexican Creoles to rebel that same
    year led by Agustin de Iturbide, this movement
    called for independence and promised benefits to
    all the upper class groups in Mexico without
    basic social and economic change.
  • With such overwhelming support, the Spanish were
    forced to concede Mexican independence in 1821
    and Iturbide declared himself emperor.

26
Mexico, Phase 3
  • When support for Iturbide waned because of his
    incompetent administrative abilities, the Creoles
    deposed Iturbide and established a republic. The
    southern portion of Mexico declared independence
    and ultimately formed the states of Guatemala, El
    Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica

The current flag was adopted in 1968, but the
overall design has been used since 1821 when the
First National Flag was created .
27
Brazil
  • Compared to the wars and revolutions in Spanish
    America, Brazil won independence relatively
    easily.
  • Trigger Napoleons conquest forced the
    Portuguese royal family into exile and the royals
    ruled from Brazil. During their Brazilian exile,
    Portugals royal family encouraged Brazilian
    immigration, industrial production, and formally
    joined Brazil with Portugal as a joint kingdom
    with equal status.
  • The king returned to Portugal in 1820 and
    repealed the reforms and ended Brazils raised
    status.
  • However, the kings ruling son in Portugal was
    successfully persuaded by Brazilian elites to
    declare independence, which Portugal conceded in
    1825.

Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil Pedro IV of Portugal
28
Part III
  • Results??
  • Changes? Continuities?

29
Thesis In the End, elites win everyone else
loses . . .
  • By the 1830s, only the Caribbean islands (except
    Haiti) and a few enclaves on the coasts of
    Central and South America remained European
    colonies.
  • Nineteen new states emerged, and they maintained
    many similarities yielded from their common
    colonial heritage.
  • Moreover, these new nations reflected their
    previous colonial status through their economic,
    political, and social structures.

30
  • Economically, the new Latin American states were
    dependent on the export and sale of agricultural
    and mineral raw materials.
  • The industrial output was low and outmoded
    production techniques (still dependent on cheap
    manual labor) resembled those of central and
    eastern Europe.
  • The nations imported manufactured goods from
    European nations and became indebted to them for
    investment capital governments offered tax
    breaks and other investment incentives, and
    Europeans came to invest heavily in the 19th c.
  • European businessmen combined labor-saving
    technology with cheap labor to create profitable
    plantations and mines, and later factories,
    roads, railroad, telegraph networks, and
    petroleum refineries.

31
  • Rich property holders and the Catholic Church
    continued to wield economic and political power
    and were now joined by the national military
    establishments.
  • Independence brought few economic improvements
    for the masses, who continued to work for the
    elite.
  • Like the eastern European peasantry, the peons
    received little pay and lacked decent housing,
    adequate food, proper sanitation, and basic
    education.

32
In the new states
  • On paper, the constitutions were influenced by
    revolutionary France US they set up liberal
    republicans with elected officers, civil
    liberties, equality before the law, and varying
    degrees of religious toleration.
  • In reality, however, these ideals were not
    realized as the tiny elite continued to impose
    rule over the impoverished and uneducated masses.
    Civil rights were not extended to the masses,
    and political involvement was limited to a small
    portion of the population.

33
Caudillos
Fraud and corruption permeated politics, and
elections were frequently overturned by armed
forces led by caudillos. Caudillos first
appeared during the early 19th c. in South
America, as a type of militia leader with a
charismatic personality and enough of a populist
program of generic future reforms to gain broad
sympathy, at least at the outset, among the
common people.
Juan Vicente Gómez (1837-1935) overthrew the
elected president, and ruled Venezuela by his
personal authority until his death
34
Political Factions
  • Two groups typically emerged conservatives and
    liberals
  • Conservatives wanted to preserve the powers and
    privileges of the upper class and church
  • Liberals wanted to break down these privileges so
    that the small, mostly mestizo, middle class
    could share economic and political power.

35
Slavery
  • The new states also permitted the continuation of
    slavery by typically initiating programs of
    gradual emancipation, but they ultimate abolished
    slavery.
  • In 1888, Brazil was the last state to abolish
    slavery.
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